Well, by now, I think you're really getting the hang of how to evaluate images…and how to use the tools and how to get real good quality scans, and it takes…some time to get there.…You've got to learn, you're going to make some mistakes and then come back and redo things.…But after you've learned the tools and you're ready to scan and ready to go, now…you really want to start working on your efficiency.…And as I showed you earlier in this chapter when we did both the grayscale…landscape, and the RGB landscape, you can set up two images at one time…just like we have here.…Here, I've got the GF photo, and we've got the Moose photo.…

Once you create a frame, all the parameters that you assign here are saved with…that frame, and assigned to that frame like this is RGB and we've got their…corrections up here with the histogram and the curves.…I click on the Moose, it changes the Scan Type from RGB to Grayscale, the…resolution is different, the names are different.…Wouldn't it be nice if you had 4, 5 images on there that you could just get them…

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Released

10/11/2011

Review the scanning techniques graphics professionals and photographers use, while delving into workflow considerations and the advanced image-quality controls available in most scanning software. Author Taz Tally explains the core concepts, such as how resolution and interpolation affect scans; introduces the industry-standard SilverFast scanning software; and shares the settings to achieve the best results from a scan. The course also covers keeping your scanner and its parts clean and free of dust, and includes a variety of start-to-finish scanning tasks.